Research Article

Persistent Infection of a Cell Line of Mouse Origin after Cell Fusion by u.v.-inactivated Sendai Virus

Journal of General Virology 1980; 46(1):219 · https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-46-1-219

View at publisher PubMed

Abstract

A cell line derived from Sendai virus-induced fusion of human adenocarcinoma and CBA mouse embryo cells had Sendai virus antigen (detected by immunofluorescence), together with bi-armed marker chromosomes, in 100% of the cells. After repeated passage, antigen-free cells carrying the same marker chromosomes appeared in the culture. Acrylamide gel analysis showed that all the Sendai virus antigens of antigen-positive cells were normal with the exception of the M protein. Antigen-negative cells contained no virus proteins and could be superinfected with wild-type virus, when all virus proteins appeared.

* Present address: University of Michigan School of Medicine, Rackham Arthritis Unit, Kresge Building, Ann Arbour, Michigan 48109, U.S.A.